An elevator control box is constructed to avoid propagating a cable fire in the control box into the elevator shaft. The control box is incorporated in a wall of the elevator shaft and has an opening through which a cable is guided. A fireproof element is positioned in the control box surrounding the cable in the region of the opening.
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11. A control box for an elevator for mounting in a wall of an elevator shaft comprising:
a hollow box having a wall with an opening formed therein; a cable extending through said opening in said wall; a fireproof element mounted in said box surrounding said cable in a region of said opening to prevent smoke or flames inside said box from exiting through said opening; and a pair of clamping elements and a clamping device, one of said clamping elements being movable relative to another of said clamping elements and said fireproof element being clamped in place between said clamping elements by said clamping device drawing said clamping elements toward one another.
1. A control box for an elevator for mounting in a wall of an elevator shaft comprising:
a hollow box having a wall with an opening formed therein; a cable extending through said opening in said wall; a fireproof element mounted in said box surrounding said cable in a region of said opening to prevent smoke or flames inside said box from exiting through said opening; and a clamping means including a pair of generally planar clamping elements movable relative to one another and a clamping device and wherein said fireproof element is clamped in place between said clamping elements by said clamping device extending through said fireproof element and drawing said clamping elements toward one another.
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The present invention relates generally to a control box for an elevator.
The European patent document EP 0 680 921 B1 shows a control box for an elevator that is installed in a wall of the elevator shaft at the floor. A fireproof door is in fact provided at the control box and protects the electrical subassemblies of the control box against fire on the floor and the floor against fire in the control box, but in the case of fire in the control box the fire is not prevented from propagating into the shaft in which the elevator car moves. Thus, it is not guaranteed that in the case of fire in the control box the persons located in the shaft or in the car are sufficiently protected. This form of embodiment therefore does not fulfil the technical safety requirements to the full extent.
It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide a control box for an elevator in which it is ensured with sufficient certainty that a fire in the control box, especially a cable fire, cannot propagate into the shaft space.
The present invention concerns a control box for an elevator, which is provided in a wall of an elevator shaft, has an opening through which a cable is guided. In addition, the control box includes a fireproof element that surrounds the cable in the region of the opening.
It is of particular advantage to provide the opening in the lower region of the control box, because the fire propagation can thereby be further reduced. It also is of advantage to construct the fireproof element from ceramic fiber, rock wool, glass wool, a silicate compound or gypsum. A sufficient fire protection insulation is thereby guaranteed. In order to further increase the fire protection insulation, the cable can be advantageously tightly enclosed by the fireproof element.
In addition, it is of advantage to provide two clamping elements and a clamping device, wherein the fireproof element is clamped in place between the two clamping elements by means of the clamping device. The fireproof element thereby tightly surrounds the cable, whereby a high fire protective isolation is achieved. The clamping device can advantageously comprise a screw and a nut.
It is of advantage if the control box includes a foot, wherein the screw as a component of the clamping device can additionally serve as the foot. The control box can advantageously stand on the floor in a recess. The cable can be an electrical cable or a cable for actuation of a brake.
Finally, it can also be of advantage to provide the opening in the upper region of the control box. The cable guidance into the shaft is thereby optimized.
The above, as well as other advantages of the present invention, will become readily apparent to those skilled in the art from the following detailed description of a preferred embodiment when considered in the light of the accompanying drawings in which:
An elevator control box 4 according to the present invention is shown in
In a top plan view
In
In the case of the embodiment shown in
In the
The upper end of the control box 4 in conjunction with a cover connecting element 14 is shown in cross-section in FIG. 5. After the control box 4 has been positioned at the floor and the cable 3 guided through the opening 5 into the elevator shaft 2, the cover connecting element 14, also termed a closure panel, is inserted as shown (before and after insertion) and screw-connected with the control box 4. The cable 3 can be fixed in the control box 4 by means of a fixing element 15.
A fireproof element 6, for example a ceramic fiber mat, a rock wool mat, a glass wool mat, a mat of a silicate compound or gypsum, is installed in the upper region of the control box 4 inside the top wall 4.4 for fire isolation.
In order to keep the fireproof element 6 in its position and to lightly bias it so that it completely tightly encloses the cable 3, the fireproof element 6 can be held by means of a clamping assembly including a first clamping element 7.1, a second clamping element 7.2, and a clamping device such as a screw 7.3 and a nut 7.4. The biasing of the fireproof element 6 can be set by way of the screw 7.3. The second clamping element 7.2 can be a sheet metal strip, a sheet metal plate or the like in order to achieve a distribution, over an area, of the biasing force produced by the screw 7.3. The first clamping element 7.1 is usually a sheet metal strip that forms at least a portion of the top wall 4.4 of the control box 4. The nut 7.4 serves as a counter member for the screw 7.3.
The use of a ceramic fiber mat as the fireproof element 6 for fire protective isolation has the advantage that this does not lose its mechanical properties even under high temperature. Moreover, the ceramic fiber mat has the advantage that it can be compressed. It thereby prevents gases from passing through the opening 5 of the control box 4. Finally, the ceramic fiber mat has the advantage that it is simple to mount without the material breaking.
The size of the ceramic fiber mat depends on the size of the control box. A three centimeter thick fireproof insulation should usually be sufficient.
The opening 5 in the control box 4 for the passage of the cable 3 also can be disposed in a bottom wall 4.5 of the control box 4 (as shown in FIG. 6), as the cable passage from the control box out into the shaft 2 is more difficult to seal off in the case of an opening in a rear wall 4.6 of the control box 4.
In the embodiment shown in
The control box 4 advantageously stands in a recess formed in the floor 8. The recess amounts to about ten centimeters so that the cable 3 can be guided underneath the control box 4 into the shaft 2. The screw 7.3 serves as a foot and additionally functions in a second clamping assembly together with the first clamping element 7.1, the second clamping element 7.2 and the nut 7.4 for compressing the fireproof element 6.
The opening 5 in the control box 4 is advantageously selected to be just sufficiently large for the cable 3 to be able to be conveniently guided through the opening.
The cable 3 is fixed in the control box 4 by the fixing element 15.
A section D--D through the control box 4 in
The use of several of the screws 7.3 particularly in the lower portion of the control box 4 has the advantage that the box thereby stands on several feet and thus in a more stable manner.
The bottom portion of the control box 4 is illustrated in cross-section plan view in FIG. 8. The connecting metal plate 10, as shown in
In accordance with the provisions of the patent statutes, the present invention has been described in what is considered to represent its preferred embodiment. However, it should be noted that the invention can be practiced otherwise than as specifically illustrated and described without departing from its spirit or scope.
Clouet, Christophe, Aubry, William
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Executed on | Assignor | Assignee | Conveyance | Frame | Reel | Doc |
Nov 28 2001 | CLOUET, CHRISTOPHE | Inventio AG | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 012380 | /0321 | |
Nov 28 2001 | AUBRY, WILLIAM | Inventio AG | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 012380 | /0321 | |
Dec 13 2001 | Inventio AG | (assignment on the face of the patent) | / |
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